Saturday: Natalie Goldberg

Natalie Goldberg

BIO

Natalie Goldberg is the author of Writing Down The Bones: Freeing The Writer Within, which broke open the world of creativity and started a revolution in the way we practice writing in this country. Since then she has written fourteen other books, including the novel Banana Rose. Goldberg is also a prolific painter. Her book Living Color: A Writer Paints Her World, describes painting as her second art form. Her watercolors are exhibited at Ernesto Mayans Gallery in Santa Fe, New Mexico and at her website. Top of My Lungs contains forty poems, twenty of her paintings in color and an essay, “How Poetry Saved My Life.” Natalie has been teaching seminars in writing as a practice for the last thirty years.
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SATURDAY

This February in New Mexico was surprisingly mild—in the fifties day after day, while the rest of the country—even Atlanta, Georgia—was slammed with abnormally cold weather. But in Santa Fe it might as well have been the Arctic. My hands and feet continually felt like ice and nothing warmed them. My heart was halted. I had received hard news about my health. At night no sleep came. I lay in bed blank-minded till dawn. My shoulders were hunched and rounded.

The third Saturday in the month I’d committed to a full-day hiking with my dear friend Ann. Nothing in me wanted to go. She zipped over at nine a.m. “Let’s go to the winter place,” I suggested. A long-time Taos resident had showed it to me above the Rio Grande.

We drove up through the gorge, made a right over a rickety bridge and parked. Passing under aged crooked apple trees, we stepped over a thin trickle of water, almost a miracle in this dry country. One foot in front of another was all I could manage.

We wound our way to the top ridge after two hours and looked down on the river’s dark curving back. Black volcanic rock surrounded us. Over to the northwest was Wheeler Peak, the state’s highest mountain, covered in white. Normally, I would have been delighted, but no go. The hard crust of pain eroded my delight.
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Ann grabbed my shoulders. “I’m so sorry, Nat.” I could barely turn up the slightest curve on the corners of my lips.
We headed back.

Now here’s where it gets tricky. The path down wasn’t obvious. We quickly found ourselves lost, peering over jagged boulders—No, not this way. Not this—or this. We had little time. The sun would go behind the west mountain in an hour. I was numb and all I wanted was to get back in the car and drive home. Usually I love the challenge and alertness of getting lost.

Ann suggested we might have to bushwhack down over rocks.

“Wait,” I said, looking around. A small crevice. We followed it, finding ourselves in a field thick with last year’s bent yellow dry grass. An elevated plateau, a pasture? In my forty years here I had never seen anything like this. We stumbled, going in different directions in an expanse the size of two football fields. Our boots cracked through thin layers of ice.

At last, I came to an edge, a narrow stream a foot wide rushing down. I looked closer, fresh dark green watercress. The whole field had small springs saturating it—and animal droppings everywhere. In the humps and bent grass, I saw the shapes of large animals. “Ann,” I called across. “This is where they come at night to sleep.”
Our eyes met—“Elk Meadow,” her mouth formed the words. We had seen their hoof-prints all along the trail.
However crushed I am, nothing now but looking for the way home. I go toward two enormous cottonwoods with last summer’s leaves, tinkling brown, hanging on. Between them lay a path and the road back is at the bottom. Why is it that we never saw this before?

*****

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13 Comments:

  1. You never saw it before because it wasn’t your time to “see”.

  2. “Why is that we never saw this before.” Words to remember and take on every journey. Thank you.

  3. Lovely! Thank you for sharing the story of our miraculous discovery of Elk Meadow.

  4. I’ve admired Natalie Goldberg for decades.

  5. Francine Drubick

    You have given so much to the world! I hope your hard news about your health improves. Sending you good thoughts.

    Francine

  6. Thank you, Natalie. Seems we have to climb to the rough high places before we can take comfort in the lush meadows. Be well!

  7. Cyndi Bailey Morgan

    Just got back from my first visit to New Mexico.. I am filled to overflowing with awe and majesty of the desert and mountains, the art, the laid back life style the beautiful pueblos.. can’t wait to get started painting it all and finishing my blog.. I so hope you are completely healed by now. You are a light to many! We love your writing and reflections and your paintings! Wish I could have met you while out there!
    Back in Raleigh, NC now and going to see the Rolling Stones tonight with old friends!
    60 year olds rocking out with a buncha 70 year old hooligans!!!
    Blessings to you dear lady!
    Cyndi Morgan
    celestelunar9@gmail.com

  8. Sorry about your hard news. Well wishes.

  9. Thank you Natalie,
    Here’s to the things we never saw before.

  10. Katherine Forrest

    Oh forgot to mention that I live in Taos now, do you?

  11. Katherine Forrest

    loved this and loved banana rose wish there was lots more of this. sorry to hear you have health issues, and i remember you at Pharmacia in Santa Fe collecting your compound of bioidenticals and saying it made you less of a bitch. ha ha ha ha. . . me too. please be well i enjoy your painting too.

  12. Beautiful, and metaphorically profound.

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